Wiggins v. State

104 So. 2d 560, 39 Ala. App. 433, 1958 Ala. App. LEXIS 188, 1958 Ala. Civ. App. LEXIS 24
CourtAlabama Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 15, 1958
Docket4 Div. 358
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 104 So. 2d 560 (Wiggins v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alabama Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wiggins v. State, 104 So. 2d 560, 39 Ala. App. 433, 1958 Ala. App. LEXIS 188, 1958 Ala. Civ. App. LEXIS 24 (Ala. Ct. App. 1958).

Opinion

*435 CATES, Judge.

Wiggins, indicted for assault with intent to murder Gladys Wiggins (who had divorced him absolutely), was tried April 22 and 23, 1957, and convicted thereof and sentenced to fifteen years’ imprisonment.

Viewing the State’s case in the light of the verdict, we find:

January 2, 1957, at about 8:20 P.M. Mrs. Wiggins was at home (in the Clearview section off the River Falls Plighway in tlie environs of Andalusia) sewing and the children were watching television. Wiggins came to the house saying he wanted to talk to Mrs. Wiggins. Telling him she thought they had nothing worth talking about, she refused him admittance. Whereupon, he retired to his car parked in the driveway.

Next, she heard him approaching the door to the kitchen located on the “front side” of the house. He broke the hook on the screened porch door and finding the kitchen barred, he fired through it (the top half was glass) with a shot gun and hit Mrs. Wiggins in the 'side and in the arm. As she and her son ran out another door across the front lawn toward a neighbor’s house, Wiggins fired at her twice, the first of these shots hitting her in the left hand and arm. Another shot hit her in the hips and legs — •

“ * * * I fell and he said he was going to get Linda. That is my daughter. So I started trying to get up. Well, I still did have the leg. He came on down there though where I was, and I don’t remember the words he used, but I was begging him not to hit me any more, not to shoot me any more, and he hit me with the barrel of the gun, like he was standing and hit me on this side of my head, and he hit again then on this side, and I can remember very definitely that I was about to faint, and I said I can’t because there wasn’t anybody else with the children there. I kept begging him not to hit me any more. He said he was going to kill me, and he also said he was going to get my brother, he was going to kill him, and he led or drug me up to the car. The car was parked — I don’t know the distance.
“The Court: Just go ahead and tell the best you can.
“A. The car was on the upper side of the yard and this was down on the lower side of the yard, and I don’t *436 know how, just with him leading or dragging me by my arm, but he had me pinned between he and the car when the police got there. He had the gun drawn back and when the policeman got out of the car and came and flashed his light on him he turned me loose and he took the gun with both hands and drew it on the policeman, and he rasseled the gun from him. * * * ”

There was evidence of his making prior threats against her life and limb.

Roger, age 10, and Linda, 13, children of Mrs. Wiggin’s first marriage — she was the widow of defendant’s cousin, Buck Wiggins — both gave testimony substantially corroborative of the foregoing account.

Wiggins entered a plea of not guilty and also- one of not g'uilty by reason of insanity.

As to this latter plea, there was evidence tending to show (1) that Wiggins tried to drown himself by sticking his head in a plugged up commode in his cell at the Andalusia police station; (2) that the police found a capsule in the defendant’s pocket; (3) that defendant had headaches, in fact he was complaining of one the afternoon of January 2, 1957; (4) that on that same afternoon Wiggins came to his parents’ home complaining of headache and his father gave him a little bottle of tablets (later identified as “Doriden”), of which the defendant took two, and later his father found the bottle (which had first held some eight or ten tablets) empty; (5) that defendant also took two capsules of a painkiller (“Tuinal”) prescribed for him by a physician when he had had a toe operation; (6) that defendant remembered nothing from the taking of these drugs until awakening in a hospital room after the attack; (7) that he was rejected by the Army because of a nervous condition; (8) that he had a blackout once when his wife told him of some undisclosed awful matter that put him in a state of shock; (9) that he told the Police Chief he thought he was shooting his ex-brother-in-law; and other miscellaneous indicia from which abnormality could be inferred

The State’s rebuttal evidence tended to demonstrate Wiggins’s eccentricities came from drinking.

There is a threshold question which was presented by way of a motion for continuance and by a motion for the trial judge to recuse himself.

The motion for continuance filed April 22, 1957, prayed the court “to grant a continuance of the trial of this case until the fall term of Court, or at least until sufficient time has elapsed to permit the subsiding of the violent prejudice which the Court itself has heaped upon this Defendant.”

The assigned grounds in support of this motion were (1) the trial judge’s reading to the venire of the preceding week (April 15, 1957) of a prepared statement:

“Gentlemen of the Jury:
“The 'Court desires to make some statements and observations to you that concern one of the criminal cases set for trial this week. The case to which we have reference is that of the State vs A. T. Wiggins. At this juncture the case has not been called for trial.
“We prefer to be very careful and guarded in our remarks. For that reason and for the sake of accuracy we have reduced to writing our preliminary observations.
“A very respected citizen, a member of this jury, called me over the phone Saturday afternoon, while I was at my residence, and stated that he would like to see me. In due course we called at his place of business.
“This juror, whose name will be revealed to you in due time, told me that he had had a conversation from which he drew an inference that some *437 unconventional contacts with prospective jurors for this week were being made. In due time this witness will be permitted to verify his conversation. He told us that he had cause to believe some jurors might have been seen about the work of the court this week.
“We felt that we would not be committing judicial impropriety to pursue this matter further by contacting some of the jurors reasonably accessible for was reasonable foundation for this the purpose of ascertaining if there Court to believe that the jurors here this week might have been approached about any case set for trial this week.
“We were convinced after further investigation that an inquiry on the subject should be pursued in open Court today with the aid of the Circuit Solicitor and such others as may want to participate. We wish to ascertain by this inquiry whether or not other jurors have been contacted by overzealous persons interested in the outcome of the Wiggins case.
“It is therefore the purpose of this Court to give every juror present an opportunity to tell from the witness stand today, under oath, whether or not he has had an undesired and unwelcome visitor, who, by subtle or bold methods, sought to influence him or obtain his views on the case of the State vs. Wiggins.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
104 So. 2d 560, 39 Ala. App. 433, 1958 Ala. App. LEXIS 188, 1958 Ala. Civ. App. LEXIS 24, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wiggins-v-state-alactapp-1958.